Relationships Between Teaching Faculty and Teaching Librarians

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A01=Linda S Katz
academic collaboration
ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standard
ACRL Standard
Author_Linda S Katz
Bibliographic Instruction
Bibliographic Instruction Sessions
California State University
California State University Northridge
Category=GL
Category=JNM
digital
Encourage Faculty Participation
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic study education
faculty engagement strategies
Faculty Librarian Relationship
graduate student instruction
haworth
higher education pedagogy
identifier
IL Program
ILI
Improve Graduate Student
In-class Worksheets
Incorporating Information Literacy Instruction
information
Information Competence Skills
Information Literacy
Information Literacy Instruction
Information Literacy Training
Information Research Skills
instruction
interdisciplinary teaching partnerships
Librarian Faculty Collaboration
library
Library Instruction
Library Instruction Session
Library Research Assignments
Library Research Project
literacy
LL
object
press
reference
research skills development
Student Information Literacy Skills

Product details

  • ISBN 9780789025722
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 151 x 214mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Aug 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Every librarian who teaches in an academic library setting understands the complexities involved in partnering with teaching faculty. Relationships Between Teaching Faculty and Teaching Librarians recounts the efforts of librarians and faculty working together in disciplines across the board to create and sustain connections crucial to the success of library instruction. This unique collection of essays examines various types of partnerships between librarians and faculty (networking, coordination, and collaboration) and addresses the big issues involved, including teaching within an academic discipline, the intricacies of assigning grades, faculty perceptions of library instruction, and the changing role of the reference librarian.

Education is the main focus of reference service in today's academic libraries and librarians teach a variety of single-session, course-related, course-integrated, or credit-bearing courses in nearly every discipline. Relationships Between Teaching Faculty and Teaching Librarians reflects the experiences of librarians, teaching faculty, and library directors, whose perspectives range from cynicism to cautious optimism to idealism when it comes to working with teaching faculty. The book includes case studies, surveys, sample questionnaires, statistics, and a toolkit for establishing an effective library liaison program, and examines the teaching and learning environment, course growth and maintenance, and the professor librarian model.

Relationships Between Teaching Faculty and Teaching Librarians presents lessons learned from seeking a common ground including:

  • a successful faculty/librarian collaboration for educational psychology and counseling
  • a library research project for freshman engineering students
  • a semester-by-semester look at a collaboratively taught graduate research and writing course
  • a survey that determines how librarians and library directors feel about teaching outside the library
  • an analysis of librarians’ attitudes toward faculty
  • an analysis of attitudes that influence faculty collaboration in library instruction
  • a look at innovative methods of increasing the teaching roles of librarians
  • and much more!

The Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSA/CHE) has mandated that information literacy be included as part of a general education requirement. If your faculty wasn't calling for library instruction before the mandate, it probably is now. Relationships Between Teaching Faculty and Teaching Librarians will help librarians establish communication with faculty that provides a solid foundation for coursework in all disciplines.

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